Invasion History

First Galapagos Record: 2015

General Invasion History:

Amathia verticillata is an erect, soft-bodied bryozoan, first described from the Mediterranean Sea (Naples, Italy) and now widespread in tropical, subtropical, and warm-temperate waters around the world (Winston 1977; Gordon and Mawatari 1992) We consider it cryptogenic in the tropical-subtropical Atlantic from North Carolina and Bermuda to Santos, Brazil, (Osburn 1914; Marcus 1937; Osburn 1940; Maturo 1958; Winston 1982, but see Farrapeira, 2011) and the coast of west Africa (Senegal and Gana, Cook 1968), Pacific coast of Central America (Soule et al. 1980, cited by Carlton and Cohen 1995), Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal waters of India (Robertson 1921, cited by Cohen and Carlton 1995); Karande (1968, cited by Winston 1977; Rao and Ganapati 1978), and southern China, in the South China Sea (Huang 2001). 
 
The origin of this bryozoan is unknown, but it is a documented invader in California (1905, Cohen and Carlton 1995), Hawaii (before 1921, Carlton and Eldredge 2007), New Zealand (Gordon and Mawatari 1992), Australia (before 1975, Keough and Ross 1999), Japan (early 1900s, Asakura 1992); South Korea (Je et al. 1988), the Azores (2008, Amat and Tempera 2009), Madeira (Wirtz and Canning-Clode 2009), and the Canary Islands (2010, Canning-Clode et al. 2013; Minchin 2012), and Taiwan (Minchin et al. 2016). Its larval period is brief (Hyman 1959), so that fouling and ballast water (as fragments of adult colonies or attached to bits of flotsam) are likely vectors for its introduction. A recent review documents the probable introduction of this bryozoan to the Mediterranean Sea, where it was first discovered in the early 19th century but is largely restricted to harbors and marinas (Marchini et al. 2015). Galil and Gevli (2014) argued for a Caribbean origin of A. verticillata, because of its strong association with corals, rocks, and seagrasses there, and the presence of a specialized nudibranch predator there (Okenia zoobotryon).

Invasion History in the Galapagos:

In 2015, A. verticillata was collected for the first time in the Galapagos Islands, in Tortuga Bay, Santa Cruz, Island (McCann et al. 2015). In 2016 it was found on Baltra Island, and in Academy Bay, Franklin's Bay and Tortuga Bay on Santa Cruz Island (McCann et al. 2019). 

Invasion history elsewhere in the world:

Amathia verticillata is a recent introduction in the Indian Ocean, the South China Sea, and Japan, appearing in the early 1900s, and first collected in Tokyo Bay in 1963 (Asakura 1992; Jebakumar et al. 2017). This bryozoan was newly recorded on the south coast of South Korea, where it became a pest fouling cultured pearl oysters (Je et al. 1988). However, Otani (2006) lists it as a cryptogenic species in Japan. It was first collected in Auckland Harbor, New Zealand about 1960 and has since been found in several harbors on the North Island (Gordon and Mawatari 1992).  Amathia verticillata was collected in New South Wales before 1975 (Russ and Wake 1975, cited by Keough and Ross 1999) and in South and Western Australia before 1982 (Bock 1982, cited by Keough and Ross 1999; Huisman et al. 2008). 
 
Amathia verticillata was first reported from Europe in Cadiz, Spain, in 1807, and described from Naples in 1822 Marchini et al. (2015) has described this species as 'pseudo-indigenous', probably introduced very early, but still largely confined to harbors and marinas, and preferring artificial substrates (Marchini et al. 2015). Early Mediterranean records, from west to east include Malaga, Spain, 1823, Algiers, Algeria 1848, Livorno, Italy 1848, Naples, Italy 1822 and Alexandria, Egypt 1828 (Marchini et al. 2015). Locally in the Mediterranean, A. verticillata rapidly colonize marinas, and provide habitat for other introduced species (Marchini et al. 2015). A. verticillata is a recent invader in the Azores, where it appeared in marinas in 2008 on three of the islands (Amat and Tempera 2009), and Madeira, where it was first collected in May of 2009 (Wirtz and Canning-Clode 2009). 
 
In the Eastern Pacific, Amathia verticillata was first collected in Los Frailes Bay in the Gulf of California in 1958,), Baja California and at Mazatlán, Sinaloa (Soule 1963). This bryozoan was collected further south in Oaxaca in 2017 and 2018 (Humara-Gil, et al. 2019). It was first reported from the Pacific coast of South America in 2014, in the Salinas Yacht Club, Ecuador (Priscilla Martinez, personal communication, February 2015, cited by McCann et al. 2015).

Description

Amathia verticillata is an erect, un-calcified bryozoan, with colonies made of irregularly thick transparent, branching or triple-quadruple branching stolons with zooids attached. Colonies can resemble ‘stringy, gelatinous noodles or sauerkraut up to 2 m long’ (Gordon and Mawatari 1992). The zooids are ovoid, about 380 X 580 µm in size, and occur in clusters on either side of the thick transparent stolon. The polypides have eight tentacles and large gizzards. The zooids brood whitish embryos (description from Winston 1982; Gordon and Mawatari 1992; Vieira et al. 2014). Colonies vary greatly in size, 400–700 mm in Brazil (Farrapeira et al. 2010) to 2200 mm (Amat et al. 2011). 

Recent molecular work has confirmed that Amathia verticillata is a single global species (Nascimento et al. 2021). A recent genetic analysis of the family Vesiculariidae supports a synonymy of the genera Amathia, Bowerbankia, and Zoobotryon (Waeschenbach et al. 2015). 

 


Taxonomy

Taxonomic Tree

Kingdom:   Animalia
Phylum:   Bryozoa
Class:   Gymnolaemata
Order:   Ctenostomata
Suborder:   Carnosa
Superfamily:   Vesicularioidea
Family:   Vesiculariidae
Genus:   Amathia
Species:   verticillata

Synonyms

Amathia goodei (Verrill, 1901)
Hydra verticillata (Della Chaije, 1828)
Zoobotryon pellucidus (Ehrenberg, 1839)
Amathia verticillata (Waeschenbach et al., 2015)

Potentially Misidentified Species

Ecology

General:

Life History- Amathia verticillata is an erect, uncalcified bryozoan, composed of many individual zooids. The zooids feed by extending the ciliated tentacles of the lophophore as a funnel, creating a current, and driving food particles into their mouths. The food is guided along the tentacles and through the pharynx by the cilia. Larger food particles can be moved or captured by flicking or contracting the tentacles. The zooids are hermaphroditic, and produce large yolky eggs, which hatch into lecithotrophic larvae, which are planktonic for short periods (less than 1 day). Larvae settle on a substrate and metamorphose into the first zooid of a colony, an ancestrula (Barnes 1983). 
 
Ecology- This bryozoan is found on wood, rock, vegetation (including eelgrass and mangroves), shells, and man-made structures, including vessel hulls (Winston 1982; Gordon and Mawatari 1992; Minchin 2012). In an investigation of chemical compounds affecting feeding on A. verticillata, a Brazilian population had alkaloids that deterred feeding, while Florida populations had variable resistance to feeding. Dos Santos et al. (2017) suggest that the success of this bryozoan is due to factors other than toxicity. 

Food:

Phytoplankton

Trophic Status:

Suspension Feeder

SusFed

Habitats

General HabitatMarinas & DocksNone
General HabitatRockyNone
General HabitatGrass BedNone
General HabitatCoarse Woody DebrisNone
General HabitatOyster ReefNone
General HabitatCanalsNone
General HabitatMangrovesNone
General HabitatVessel HullNone
Salinity RangeMesohaline5-18 PSU
Salinity RangePolyhaline18-30 PSU
Salinity RangeEuhaline30-40 PSU
Tidal RangeSubtidalNone
Vertical HabitatEpibenthicNone

Life History


Tolerances and Life History Parameters

Minimum Salinity (‰)15Nair et al. 1992
Maximum Salinity (‰)40Field salinity (Shark Bay, Western Australia) (Wyatt et al. 2005)
Minimum Length (mm)100Colony length, Azores (Amat et al. 2009, on marina floats)
Maximum Height (mm)2,200Colony length, Azores (Amat et al. 2009, on marina floats)
Broad Temperature RangeNoneWarm temperate-Tropical
Broad Salinity RangeNoneMesohaline-Euhaline

General Impacts

Economic Impacts

Shipping/Boating- Amathia verticillata is known from ship fouling (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 1952) and is reported to cause fouling problems to boats and marinas in southern California (Johnson et al. 2006).

Fisheries- Amathia verticillata causes major problems by clogging shrimp-fishing gear in Galveston Bay, Texas (Gossett et al. 2004). It was reported as a pest species fouling cultured pearl oysters, Pinctada fuca, on the south coast of Korea (Je et al. 1988).

Ecological Impacts

Habitat Change- Amathia verticillata grows epiphytically on the leaves of eelgrass (Zostera marina), killing plants in San Diego Bay, which creates gaps in the seagrass canopy, leaving bare patches of sediment available for colonization by other algal species (Williams 2007).


Regional Distribution Map

Bioregion Region Name Year Invasion Status Population Status
SEP-Z 2015 Def Estab

Occurrence Map

OCC_ID Author Year Date Locality Status Latitude Longitude
35656 McCann et al. 2015 2015 2015-02-18 Santa Cruz Island (Galapagos) Tortuga Bay Def -0.7639 -90.3403

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